Publication | Closed Access
The choice of organizational form: Vertical financial ownership versus other methods of vertical integration
461
Citations
230
References
1992
Year
Ownership StructureAbstract Vertical IntegrationFirm PerformanceFinancial ManagementOrganizational StructureManagementBusinessVertical IntegrationOrganizational FormOrganizational EconomicsBusiness StrategyCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementOrganization ScienceVertical Financial OwnershipFinanceCorporate Finance
Abstract Vertical integration is a fundamental corporate strategy of interest to the fields of strategic management and organizational economics. This paper synthesizes theoretical arguments and empirical findings from this literature to identify the underlying advantages and disadvantages of choosing vertical financial ownership relative to vertical contracts. It then suggests that in the absence of agency and transaction costs, vertical financial ownership and vertical contracting are equivalent governance structures for achieving corporate objectives. However, given a world of positive agency and transaction costs, the key theoretic question then becomes predicting when market mechanisms are sufficient, when intermediate forms of vertical contracting become necessary, and when vertical financial ownership becomes the preferred governance structure. The concluding section of the paper provides a framework for making this analysis based on a synthesis of agency and transaction costs perspectives.
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